The Guardian reports : “Leaders and diplomats from more than 30 countries have pledged to use “whatever means necessary” including military action to defeat the global threat of Islamic State (Isis), after a crisis meeting in Paris.

The emergency talks were held on Monday as France began reconnaissance flights over Iraq after announcing it was ready to join American air strikes and the prospect of Britain joining military action moved closer.

Speaking after the conference, John Kerry, the US secretary of state, ruled out military coordination with Iran in any US-led campaign against Isis – a statement that chimed discordantly with an announcement made earlier on Monday by the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, claiming that Tehran had privately refused US requests for cooperation.

Jen Psaki, Kerry’s spokesperson, said in a statement that while the US “are not and will not” coordinate militarily with Iran, it has not ruled out the possibility of future talks with the Iranian leadership. “There may be another opportunity on the margins in the future to discuss Iraq,” Psaki said.

After the talks, the French foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, said Isis was neither “a state or representative of Islam” , neither were what he called its “throat-cutters”.

“It’s a movement so dangerous that all those here today consider it necessary not just to make it retreat, but to make it disappear,” Fabius said. “When you have a group of this kind there is no other approach than to defend oneself. That is what the international community has decided to do.

“It was a solemn meeting, but when 30 countries among the most powerful in the world with very different geographical, political and ideological situations all say we have decided to fight [Isis] and not just push it back but defeat it … that is a moment that gives great hope.”

Dr Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the Iraqi foreign affairs minister, thanked those taking part in the conference for their support, which he said would “alleviate the sufferings of all Iraqi people”.

“This conference conveys a clear message, that they [the participants] are all standing by our side … that no country will be abandoned, that if it is attacked by terrorists the whole international community will stand united,” Jaafari said.

Earlier the French president, François Hollande, had urged western and Arab countries to engage “clearly, loyally and strongly at the side of the Iraqi authorities”. There was “no time to lose” in dealing with the threat from Isis. “Iraq’s combat against terrorism is also ours,” he said.

A second emergency conference is to be held in Bahrain to examine ways to cut off the funding and the flux of fighters to Isis, though no date was given. The group is believed to have recruits from 51 countries.

Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, and his US and UK counterparts, John Kerry and Philip Hammond, were at the meeting.

On Sunday, the British prime minister, David Cameron, led international condemnation of the ritualised killing of Haines and threats against a second UK citizen, Alan Henning.

As western diplomats reported that several Arab states had offered to join a US-led coalition in carrying out air strikes on the fundamentalist insurgents, Cameron said the UK was “ready to take whatever steps are necessary” to deal with the threat of Isis.

Before the conference began Fabius announced that French aircraft were to begin reconnaissance flights over Iraq, but added there was “no question of sending ground troops”.

The Iraqi president, Fouad Masoum, who has appealed for rapid air intervention, told those gathered in Paris that Daesh, the Arabic acronym for Isis, was open in its aims and called for concerted action to defeat what he described as terrorists and criminals, who represented a “new form of terrorism”.

“Daesh leaders are working at setting up a state and do not deny the existence of terrorist volunteers from European countries who may or may not have dual nationality … it goes beyond what we experienced before with al-Qaida,” he said.

“These criminals are experts at the brainwashing of young people in these regions. They control and prepare them for terrorist actions. They use modern technology to spread propaganda and terror through the internet and social media networks.

“Iraq is here today to show its will to stand up against this terrorist enemy that makes no distinction between Iraqis. We must send a strong message to the orphans, to the mothers who have lost their children, that we stand beside our people.”

More than 40 countries have signed up to a US-led plan, but not all are willing to offer Iraq direct military support. Arab participation in military action would give a wider sense of legitimacy to the campaign.

No Arab state has publicly promised to participate in military action but it is believed several have in private, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, the latter of which recently bombed Islamist militia targets in Libya from bases in Egypt.

A senior western source told the Guardian that Saudi Arabia felt so threatened by Isis that it was prepared to act in a frontline role. “There is a very real possibility that we could have the Saudi air force bombing targets inside Syria. That is a remarkable development, and something the US would be very pleased to see.”

Another senior official said Saudi Arabia was far more willing to play an open role in the offensive against Isis than it did during the 1991 Gulf war and the 2003 invasion of Iraq. On those campaigns, Riyadh allowed its military bases to be used by US forces, but did not commit its service personnel. This time, Riyadh sees Isis as a direct threat.

“They actually see themselves as the real target,” the official said. “They know that they have to step up, and they are ready to, from what we can see.”

Australia has promised to send 600 troops and eight fighter jets to help the US fight what the prime minister, Tony Abbott, called the Isis “death cult”.

The UK and the US have ruled out sending ground troops to areas of Iraq and Syria controlled by Isis jihadis, but Cameron hinted that the UK would be prepared to join the US in conducting a bombing campaign against Isis as part of a wider alliance.

Cameron heightened his rhetoric against the “monsters” in Isis after a video emerged on Saturday night purporting to show a masked fighter beheading Haines before threatening to kill Henning, a 47-year-old former taxi driver and volunteer on an aid convoy.

The jihadi, who had the same London accent as the black-clad killer in previous hostage videos, warned Cameron that he would have more blood on his hands if the UK continued to fight Isis. It is the third recent film; the others showed the murder of two US journalists – James Foley and Steven Sotloff – which have emerged at intervals of 10 to 14 days since 19 August.

A statement released at the end of the Paris conference attended by 26 countries as well as the Arab League, the EU and the UN, said they supported an inquiry led by the UN high commissioner for human rights into whether the slaughter of Iraqi and Syrian civilians constituted crimes against humanity.

The countries, it said, were committed to supporting the new Iraqi government in its fight against Isis “by any means necessary, including appropriate military assistance, in line with the needs express by the Iraqi authorities, in accordance with international law and without jeopardising civilian security”.

In his statement, Cameron made no mention of recalling parliament to debate the possibility of air strikes, which he has promised to do before ordering military action unless confronted by an emergency. MPs are in recess for party conferences until 14 October.

He is under pressure from hawks within the Conservative party, including the former defence secretary Liam Fox, who are pushing for the UK to join air strikes. British military chiefs, including Lord Dannatt, a former head of the army, warned that the strength of Isis could grow if the government did not “confront and destroy” its influence.

The US carried out at least nine air strikes last week, while the UK has pledged to help arm the Kurdish resistance forces in Iraq. These actions were mentioned in the Isis video, entitled A Message to the Allies of America, as reasons for the killing of Haines.”

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